Vinte anos após ser preso por fraude, Gordon Gekko volta à liberdade para descobrir que a sua filha o odeia e está noiva de um corretor ambicioso e desejoso de se aproximar dele. Gekko vai a... Ler tudoVinte anos após ser preso por fraude, Gordon Gekko volta à liberdade para descobrir que a sua filha o odeia e está noiva de um corretor ambicioso e desejoso de se aproximar dele. Gekko vai aproximar-se do casal, mas terá planos ocultos?Vinte anos após ser preso por fraude, Gordon Gekko volta à liberdade para descobrir que a sua filha o odeia e está noiva de um corretor ambicioso e desejoso de se aproximar dele. Gekko vai aproximar-se do casal, mas terá planos ocultos?
- Direção
- Roteiristas
- Artistas
- Prêmios
- 1 vitória e 4 indicações no total
Avaliações em destaque
I was very disappointed. This follow up didn't fare well against the original...which is almost always the case. But with Stone directing again & Douglas in again...I thought this may have a chance. Some part 2's are just laughable...I guess they make money or they would stop doing them. The big exception of course was "The Godfather part 2".
Anyway - this movie just didn't have the snap, crackle & pop of the original. And I think the movie spent way too much time on the Jake & Winnie relationship played by Shia LaBeouf (wasn't that Glenn Campbell's name in the original "True Grit", well....maybe it was LaBeef) & Carey Mulligan. By the way...very sad about Campbell's Alzheimers admission.
When I saw this movie I knew that LaBeouf had been in a lot of Hollywood movies & must have been well thought of....but it was the 1st movie I had seen him in. I thought he did OK with the part he was given. But Mulligan was such an annoying character as Winnie....or was it Whiney? Every time she was in a scene it was like fingernails on a blackboard. Did anybody else feel that way about Mulligan's performance?
And as others have said...the ending was just not very good.
Firstly, Oliver Stone and Michael Douglas always said they were amazed that Gordon Gekko was an inspiration for many a man to take up a job on Wall Street. Gekko had been intended to be a repulsive character representing greed. The fact that he was, in fact so inspirational was the reason that Wall St was such a hit. In the new film Gekko's edginess is gone. He seems almost human, and save a couple of good lines, he is an inspiration for nobody.
Second, The financial crisis has provided remarkable material that could have been made into a fast moving and exciting storyline similar to the first film. Instead Oliver Stone has chosen to tell a moral tale. The trouble is the character that Stone holds up as a helpless victim deserved his fate and Gekko also makes a choice that is supposedly the moral one but he does it only because he can afford to.
The message in the story? For me it's just that nobody knows what is moral any more, not even people who make films about morality.
Should you watch it? Yes, it's engaging and fun but don't expect the wheeling, dealing testosterone of the first film. This is a story about people, not deal making. It's just OK.
This film starts out promising enough. Seeing Michael Douglas reprising his role as the infamous Gordon Gekkos is pleasing and putting his character in these modern times is interesting, as he is now no longer a huge name on Wall Street, and there are now crooks way more greedy than he ever was. The introduction of all the new characters is also interesting. Shia LaBeouf plays his eager young Wall Street fast talker role fairly well, not as well as Charlie Sheen from the original, but it's not bad. Carey Mulligan is as beautiful as ever and does a great job as Winnie Gekko, Gordon's daughter. Frank Langella even has a brief role as an older stock broker who doesn't have anything left to live for after the crash. However, great performances can only take a film so far.
What Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps suffers from the most is just being really boring. It starts out so interesting and promising, but as the plot develops it eventually stops going anywhere and flat lines. This film doesn't help out the non-stock broker types like the original did. You have to know the lingo and you have to understand how Wall Street works and you need a lot of back story on the 2008 financial crash. I myself understand these things to a certain degree, but this film just moves too fast and doesn't let you keep up with the lingo and the fast talking. And so once you get behind you're behind for the whole film. I understood enough to follow the gist of the plot, but I also think that it is just too dull of a plot to really be that enticing whether you understand it or not. For a film that is over two hours long, it really goes nowhere after a certain point.
This isn't a terrible film, but it just doesn't really amount to much. There are some good things about it, like all the performances as well as Oliver Stone's direction. He pulls off some slick editing that gives the film a more technologically hip feel to it. If the film had kept with this same pace from start to finish it probably would have been a lot better. But when you boil it down there isn't much to see here and your mind moves right along as soon as the credits role.
Você sabia?
- CuriosidadesIn preparation for his role, Shia LaBeouf worked extensively with traders and researchers on the world of finance and economy. He even invested $20,000 and ended up making more than $400,000. A few people who trained him were later arrested for illegal acts of trading.
- Erros de gravaçãoWhen he hands the Chinese the Johnny Walker as a gift, he does not say what the subtitles indicates as "This is for you -- American Whiskey". What he says is actually translated as "I think you will like this".
- Citações
Gordon Gekko: I think, the man that you loved like a father who threw himself under a subway? I think you're angrier than you think you are. And I think you wanna be in the family business.
Jacob Moore: Which is what?
Gordon Gekko: Payback. Except I'm not in that business anymore. Because the one thing I learned in jail is that money is not the prime asset in life. Time is.
- Versões alternativasThere are two versions, the theatrical release, and the one presented at Cannes for the film's debut. The runtimes are, respectively: "2h 13m (133 min)" and "2h 16m (136 min) (Cannes)".
- ConexõesEdited from A Identidade Bourne (2002)
- Trilhas sonorasBeatin' Down the Block
Written by Ali Dee (as Ali Theodore), Julian Davis, Robert Miller, Joe Smart and Yusef Jackson
Performed by Basko feat. Nomadik & Chris Classic (as Classic)
Courtesy of DeeTown Entertainment
Principais escolhas
- How long is Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps?Fornecido pela Alexa
- Is "Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps" based on a book?
- How much time has lapsed between the original movie and this one?
- Are any of the characters and actors from "Wall Street" returning for this sequel?
Detalhes
- Data de lançamento
- País de origem
- Centrais de atendimento oficiais
- Idioma
- Também conhecido como
- Wall Street: El dinero nunca duerme
- Locações de filme
- 1 State Street Plaza, Nova Iorque, Nova Iorque, EUA(interior: Gordon Gekko's London office)
- Empresas de produção
- Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro
Bilheteria
- Orçamento
- US$ 70.000.000 (estimativa)
- Faturamento bruto nos EUA e Canadá
- US$ 52.474.616
- Fim de semana de estreia nos EUA e Canadá
- US$ 19.011.188
- 26 de set. de 2010
- Faturamento bruto mundial
- US$ 134.748.021
- Tempo de duração2 horas 13 minutos
- Cor
- Mixagem de som
- Proporção
- 2.39 : 1